Systematic Reviews
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2025.
World J Clin Oncol. May 24, 2025; 16(5): 104577
Published online May 24, 2025. doi: 10.5306/wjco.v16.i5.104577
Table 1 It provides an overview of the basic differences between gastric neuroendocrine tumors type I, II, III, and IV features

Type I
Type II
Type III
Type IV
Prevalence (%)70-805-710-20Rare
PredominanceFemalesSame frequency male:femaleMalesNot determined (possibly male)
BackgroundChronic autoimmune gastritisZollinger-Ellison Syndrome (gastrinomas)Normal gastric mucosaHypergastrinemia (1/3 of cases). Chronic atrophic gastritis (82% of cases)
Number of lesionsMultipleMultipleSingleSingle
Size of lesions1-2 cm< 10 mm> 2 cm> 4 cm (usually)
Site of lesionsGastric body/fundusGastric body/fundusGastric body/fundusAny part of the stomach
Underlying mucosaAtrophicHypertrophicNormalMainly atrophic (less frequently hypertrophic)
Cell of originECLECLECLNon-ECL
Serum gastrin levelsElevatedElevatedNormalElevated or normal
Gastric pHHigh (> 7)Low (< 2)NormalApproaching neutral to slightly alkaline
AggressivenessLowGreaterHighHigh
InvasionRareMore commonCommonCommon
PrognosisExcellentVery goodPoorPoor